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In the Center of the Struggle: The Veil in Europe
Frederik Richter
Researcher, Media Studies

25/11/2001

As the September 11th terrorist attacks on New York and Washington were immediately associated with Islam, European societies intensively turned their attention to Muslims living in their countries.  In the face of both interest in and aggression towards Islam, Muslims found themselves representing their religion apparently with their clothes.  With their veils, Muslim women were the main targets of such interest, or aggression.  

Staring eyes in the streets and in public transportation and unfriendly shop assistants formed the least unpleasant part of the reaction towards the veil.  After September 11th Muslim women were harassed and their veils were pulled down.  These incidents may have been few, but the attempts of Muslim women wearing veils to integrate into European societies are still facing difficulties.  Muslim women argue that wearing the veil is both a religious duty and part of their personal self-determination.  They say that covering their hair does not form a restriction to their life but gives them freedom from men and from the enslavement to physical attributes.  With this position they still get into conflict with public institutions. 

In the southern German region of Baden-Wuerttemberg, Fereshta Ludin, a Muslim woman of Afghani origin, tried to enter the civil service as a teacher at a public school.  The supervisory school authority asked her to stop wearing the veil and she refused.  The case went through several courts.  Finally, in July 2001, the Administrative court of Mannheim refused her the entrance into German public service.  The court argued that any manifestation of religious signs would endanger the states neutrality towards its citizens, which is the duty of a secularist state.  The court also referred to a case in Bavaria where crucifixes were being banned from the walls of classrooms.  These were said to be unconstitutional, for students could may fall to the influence of these religious symbols.  Ludin argued that the veil was part of her individuality.  She described it as a result of a personal relation to God.  She also added that in her view the sentence did not correspond to the freedom of religion and expression granted by the German constitution.   

Cem Oezdemir, a member of the German Parliament for the Greens and expert on immigration issues, underlined in an interview with the daily “Suedkurier,” that the teacher had to stick to the German constitution during her time as a trainee teacher. “This should be the measure and nothing else,” added Oezdemir.  

In a similar case in Switzerland judges followed the same lines of arguments underlining the state’s neutrality towards religion, which was to be represented by its teachers.  The Federal Court of Switzerland argued in sentence in fall 1997, that the veil forms only an outward manifestation.  By the interdiction of this symbol inner values remain intact.  The freedom of religion was still not restricted.  

The sentence in Germany led to a controversial debate on whether or not to promote further integration of Muslims in the German society.  The Central Council of Muslims in Germany stated that such debates threaten the neutrality of state values rather than abide by it.  According to this statement, Muslims were put into social isolation by the court. 

To find a balance between personal rights and the requirement of those serving the state and its citizens to withhold their personal beliefs is indeed ambitious.  The veil can easily be perceived as a political symbol, even if not intended, as in the case of Fereshta Ludin.  The veil is also a controversial issue since different perceptions of religion and the relevant parts of the Quran are essentially to judge these cases.  Fereshta Ludin says it is a religious duty for her to wear the veil, the court said it is not.  Such conflicting views and their repercussions on Ludin’s daily life in Germany in themselves trigger debates between Islamic scholars on similar cases. 

In Germany the debate on the veil has also reached the institutions of public health care.  In hospitals Muslim women were not allowed to do their job while wearing the veil.  But here the veil is handled with pragmatism, especially that in many hospitals, qualified personnel is strongly needed.  But in a school, a place not only for education but also for culture, pragmatism is still missing. 

Looking among Germany’s neighbors, we find that France is a country where the debate on the veil has a longer history.  In the early 1990s a nation-wide debate arose about the veil, touching the core elements of French self-understanding.  In 1989 two Muslim students had refused to take off the veils and were thus expelled by the school principle.  The incident, which coincided with the Fatwa on Salman Rushdie, was considered a challenge to French values and tolerance. 

Common throughout Europe are the deeper reasons for hostile reactions towards the veil. European societies are widely secularist where relations to God are very personal and are rather a taboo in public.  Also, the veil is often misunderstood to represent a certain form of oppression, reminding Europe of a permanent blot in its past.  That is why Muslim women in Western countries are often perceived to have worn the veil after being forced into it by a male family member, rather than out of personal beliefs.  The veil is often perceived as a symbol of compelling religion and traditional beliefs, making it further difficult for qualified Muslim women with the veil to fulfill their ambitions in European societies.

 

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